|
'Double Diabetes' a New Threat
The obesity epidemic is leading more people to develop type 1 and type 2 disease
By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter
SUNDAY, Dec. 3 (HealthDay
News) -- Despite the flurry of public service campaigns and education
efforts, the diabetes epidemic in the United States continues to
escalate out of control.
An estimated 20.8 million
Americans -- or 7 percent of the population -- are now believed to be
diabetic. Of those, 6.2 million people have the disease but don't know
it. And that doesn't include the 41million people with pre-diabetes, a
condition in which blood-glucose levels are higher than normal but not
high enough to be diagnosed as type 2 diabetes.
In fact, the epidemic has
become so pervasive that doctors are now finding patients who suffer
from both type 1 and type 2 diabetes -- a phenomenon known as "double
diabetes" or "hybrid diabetes."
"It's mostly people who
have a type 1 diabetes who become overweight and show the profile of a
type 2, with obesity and hypertension," said Dr. Stewart Weiss, an
assistant clinical professor of medicine at New York University School
of Medicine in New York City.
Doctors and health-care
experts are urging people to take the steps necessary -- basically
proper nutrition and plenty of exercise -- to avoid joining the ranks
of those already diagnosed with the disease.
Type 1 diabetes is caused
by the body's inability to produce insulin, the hormone that ushers
blood sugar -- called glucose -- to cells for energy. An estimated 5
percent to 10 percent of Americans with diabetes have type 1 disease.
Type 2 diabetes results from insulin resistance -- the body's inability
to properly use the hormone. Most Americans diagnosed with diabetes
have type 2 diabetes, and excess weight and lack of exercise are big
contributors to this form of the disease.
But, doctors are now seeing
strong indications that double diabetes is a growing phenomenon. For
instance, recent studies suggest that as many as 30 percent of newly
diagnosed diabetes cases among children involve youngsters with both
type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
Generally, double-diabetes
sufferers will often look as though they have the more common type 2
version because they're overweight. But subsequent blood tests reveal
they also have type 1 disease.
Double diabetes takes the suffering caused by the disease a step further, and complicates efforts to treat it.
Type 1 diabetics normally
have to take daily injections of insulin to remain healthy, while type
2 diabetics require different medication and regular monitoring of
their blood sugar. Doctors now are researching how to juggle treating
both types of diabetes in the same patient, Weiss said.
"We have all sorts of
medications that address different problems for different types of
diabetes," Weiss said. "The question with double diabetes becomes, when
can we use the different types of medications and what would be
appropriate for different patients?"
Weiss suspects that double
diabetes might be caused, in part, by type 1 diabetics who are taking
insulin but haven't made the other lifestyle changes necessary to deal
with the disease.
"One of the consequences of
proper insulin use is weight gain," he said. "Often, patients who have
not had a good understanding of how to eat are taking the insulin to
cover what they normally eat."
The national trend toward
unhealthy weight gain has spurred both the diabetes epidemic and this
newer, more complex form of the disease, agreed Dr. Francine Kaufman,
past president of the American Diabetes Association and head of the
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Childrens Hospital Los
Angeles.
"It's mirroring the obesity epidemic," Kaufman said.
Diabetes can cause a number
of complications that range from life-damaging to life-threatening.
They include heart disease and stroke, high blood pressure, blindness,
diseases of the nervous system, lower-limb amputations, dental disease
and complications during pregnancy.
The best way to avoid these
complications is to avoid contracting diabetes. A recent study
conclusively showed that people on the verge of contracting type 2
diabetes prevented its onset through changes to their diet and
increased exercise, according to the American Diabetes Association.
The federal Diabetes
Prevention Program study found that diet and exercise actually worked
better than some medications in delaying the development of diabetes,
according to the association. Just 30 minutes a day of moderate
physical activity, coupled with a five percent to 10 percent reduction
in body weight, produced a 58 percent reduction in diabetes.
"People need to maintain a healthy weight and a healthy lifestyle," Kaufman said.
Weiss recommends improving
diet by eating more vegetables, fewer starches and more lean meat and
fish. "I like to say there's no medication that can overcome a bad
diet," he said.
He also said people should not only eat healthier, but they should try to eat less, too.
"The problem really is
overeating in general," he said. "The portion size put before us is
very large, so portion control is the single most important thing.
You've got to know when to say when."
More information
To learn more, visit the American Diabetes Association.
SOURCES: Stewart Weiss,
M.D., assistant clinical professor of medicine, New York University
School of Medicine, New York City; Francine Kaufman, M.D., past
president of the American Diabetes Association, and head of the
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism at Childrens Hospital Los
Angeles; U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta;
American Dibetes Association, Alexandria, Va.
|